Known to most audiences for his hilarious characters, funnyman Will Ferrell continues to try his hand at more serious material with STRANGER THAN FICTION. The film comes as relatively light fare for director Marc Foster, whose previous works were FINDING NEVERLAND and MONSTER'S BALL. While not exactly a drama, the film shifts between humorous and heavy realms, one of its central questions being: "What makes a comedy or a tragedy?" In WINTER PASSING and MELINDA AND MELINDA, Ferrell awkwardly occupied a strange space that was neither clearly dramatic nor comedic, leaving audiences confused over whether to laugh at the actor or with him. Here, in the role of boring Harold Crick he appears a bit more at ease, as Harold is not expected to be funny--funny things just happen to him. Instead of depending on Ferrell for jokes, the film delivers laughs on its own by exploring what happens when an IRS agent with a dull, solitary life receives unwanted company in the form of an intrusive female voice narrating his every move. As distracting as this is, things become truly worrisome when the narrator (Emma Thompson as an eccentric author) informs Harold of his looming death.
How Harold's life changes as a result of this terrifying knowledge depends largely on wacky Professor Jules Hilbert (Dustin Hoffman) and on tax-evading baker/love interest Ana Pascal (Maggie Gyllenhaal). While Queen Latifah's role as an author's assistant is underdeveloped, Tony Hale brings an innocent charm as Harold's coworker and only friend. At times, the film's take on existentialist themes feels strikingly familiar, and is clearly influenced by features like ADAPTATION and I HEART HUCKABEES. Among its strengths, the film features interesting sets seemingly influenced by the 1950s version of the future, and functions as a small step forward for Ferrell.
Theatrical Release: November 10, 2006
DVD Features:
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Dubbed - French - Optional
Subtitles - English, French - Optional
Subtitles - English - Closed Captioned
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
Featurettes - 1. "Actors in Search of a Story"
2. "Building the Team"
3. "On Location in Chicago"
4. "Words on a Page"
5. "Picture a Number: A Look at the Special Effects"
6. "On the Set: A Montage of Funny On the Set Moments"
Interviews - Lindsay Doran - Producer; Zach Helm - Screenwriter
Director of Photography
Roberto Schaefer: Cinematographer
Music
Brian Reitzell: Musician
Screenplay
Zach Helm: Screenwriter, STRANGER THAN FICTION, (2006)
Music
Britt Daniel: Musician, member of Spoon
Review 1:
"You need to see how Ferrell switches gears to give a performance of nuanced wit and surprising gravity."
Source: Rolling Stone
p.124 09/07/2006
Review 2:
"Ferrell is strikingly funny railing at the omnipresent voice rattling his life."
Source: Box Office
100 11/01/2006
Review 3:
3 stars out of 4 -- "This is a Ferrell you've never seen before, nailing a role that calls for breakneck humor in the final race against the clock and touching gravity in the love scenes with Gyllenhaal."
Source: Rolling Stone
p.136 11/20/2006
Review 4:
"It is to Mr. Ferrell's credit, and the movie's, that he manages to be interesting without mugging or riffing, but rather by playing a highly controlled man in an impressively controlled manner."
Source: New York Times
p.E10 11/10/2006
Review 5:
"[A]n eminently easy-to-watch piece....[The director] gets infectious performances out of Maggie Gyllenhaal...Dustin Hoffman...and Thompson..." -- Grade: B-
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.99 11/17/2006
Review 6:
4 stars out of 5 -- "[Ferrell] makes us genuinely root for his bemused hero...It's not often laughs come with so much thought attached..."
Source: Total Film
p.32 01/01/2007
Review 7:
4 stars out of 5 -- "The script is brilliant....Thought-provoking..."
Source: Uncut
p.142 01/01/2007
Review 8:
"STRANGER THAN FICTION is particularly impressive in its use of stunning Chicago architecture and excellent production design....The performances are also uniformly excellent."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.80 01/01/2007
Review 9:
4 stars out of 5 -- "A delightfully surreal and utterly engaging post-modern film that deftly explores what it means to exist."
Source: Ultimate DVD
p.97 05/01/2007